This might be playing fantasy university, but I think UL could have a great on campus situation with these changes:
They are going to tear down the Buchannan Dorm, what I would do in an expanded footprint of that building is to build a four story dorm with apartment style rooms. On the first three floors there would be suites with two two-bedroom accomodations, each bedroom housing two students. Each would be outfitted with its own bathroom and a living room with a microwave and mini-fridge. You would have four students to a suite. Each floor would have kitchen facilities to be shared. The top floor would be for upperclassmen and would consist of two-bedroom apartments housing one student per bedroom. If any of you are familiar with Loyola-New Orleans, this idea comes from their Carrollton Hall. The new dorm would extend out towards Evangeline Hall, sealing in the nice quad they have in that section of student housing. I would also update the dorms in that area, implementing suite style housing where possible within the buildings shells. That area of campus has a lot of charm, but unfortunately UL ranks highly in the "dorms like dungeons" category and it appears the facilities need to be repaired, upgraded and modernized. I would also try to make the apartments, at least, co-ed in the same manner that Legacy is.
On the other side of campus, there are already plans to tear down the Cajun Village apartments and expand Legacy Park. Personally, it makes more sense to build a denser style of apartment style dorms. I would build one or two stories higher than legacy with apartments that are entered from an indoor hallway (as my suggestion for a new Buchannan Hall). This is much more appropriate for our landlocked university. It is important that we attract people to live on campus. It's convenient and it adds to the University community.
UL does not have the luxury that schools like LSU do. We're not a suburban school, we're downtown. Building Legacy Park style apartments is nice, but IMO is not a great use of space. More compact dorms would house more students and create a better on campus environment. One of the things UL has against it is that students are spread out across the city and really across the region. Many students live in apartments on the southside, on S. College and on Congress. Look at the new "Campus Edge" apartments. Eraste Landry is hardly on the campus' edge.
High quality on campus housing is extremely important in attracting high quality students. It's convenient, it's safer to parents and it would make UL less of a commuter school and more of a community.
Obviously this would take years and years to implement, but a master plan that seeks to work toward this goal could get the ball rolling.
Your thoughts?